Sacred Places Summer 2011 | Page 17

Steven Earl Webber’s art installation Like Lambs presented by HiddenCity Philadelphia at Shiloh Baptist Church. Photo by Joseph E.B. Elliott. within Center City. The study found that there is a strong potential for sacred places to host art galleries or artists’ residencies – the latter a mutually beneficial relationship since visiting artists often enhance the spaces they are given to work in. space. Center City Philadelphia currently has only four legitimate theater spaces available for a pool of more than 40 small professional companies looking to produce here. We have the audiences and we have the artists to serve them; what we need now is more space.” A second case study focused on emerging dance and theater organizations, confirming that there is a marked interest in congregations to work with the performing arts, and that sacred spaces within Center City present many opportunities to provide affordable space to emerging performance groups. Organizations that have had relationships with sacred spaces emphasized that long-term commitments, such as those of two years or longer, aid in the building of trust between the two groups. Service organizations see sacred places as one solution to this well-recognized problem. They called for engagement between arts groups and congregations as well as capacity-building programs for each. It is clear that efforts to align arts organizations with sacred places can be streamlined by working with service organizations and their related projects. All of these suggestions have been incorporated into the Making Homes for the Arts in Sacred Places program. Lastly, CultureWorks listened to the views of leaders of various service organizations in Philadelphia such as Dance/USA Philadelphia, the Theatre Alliance of Greater Philadelphia, GPCA, and the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. Margie Salvante, Executive Director of the Theatre Alliance of Greater Philadelphia, noted that lack of space could be a significant threat to Philadelphia’s steadily growing theatre industry: “The theatre industry of Greater Philadelphia is in a solid period of sustained growth. However, the industry’s potential…is being limited by access to performance Moving Ahead with Making Homes for the Arts in Sacred Places Based on these findings, Partners, along with CultureWorks, Dance/USA Philadelphia, the Theatre Alliance of Greater Philadelphia, the Center for Emerging Visual Artists, and GPCA, is implementing a two-phase program that will transform underused space in sacred places into thriving arts spaces. Initially, Partners will target a few arts groups that have great potential to benefit from new partnerships with congregations that have significant space to share and Sacred Places • Summer 2011 • 16